Queen Elizabeth keeps a diary of "very secret", recording her observations every night, and only her husband, Prince Philip. The details of the people I met, the places where they were, and their own thoughts are recorded in this diary, according to one of the minors. To ensure that her observations remain highly confidential, she instructs her royal assistants to destroy the paper she uses as a notebook for her notebook, on which some words may be imprinted unknowingly.

It is also said that the Queen asks to be alone in writing, and asks that no one bother her unless "something of global importance", such as a nuclear war.

One of the insiders revealed that she used drying papers, placed them under the papers on which she writes, and after completing her recordings, the first task of her private eyebrow in the morning was to exterminate this paper so that no one could ever try to read what was reversed on those papers. The Queen does not forget to record all the daily notes and carry her own notebook with it, no matter where you go. "She takes her notes with her wherever she goes, whether it's Windsor Castle, Sandringham or Palmlor, and she keeps it in a black leather case," says one insider. "But there are only two keys: one with her and the other as a reserve for her own secretary." "Never forget to record her diary, perhaps because she considers it almost as valuable as her crown jewelry, and if a lucky person misses it, he may end up locking up in the tower!"

Actor Michael Palin, who was awarded the Queen's Equestrian Medal, revealed more information about the queen's love for recording her observations.

Sir Michael, 76, learned of the queen's memoir when she invited him one night at Windsor Castle and sat next to her at dinner. Sir Michael said: "We were talking about the diary after I mentioned that I was recording my notes every night about where I was and the people I met. She told me she was doing the same, and the difference was that while my notes were for publication, her notes were not for that purpose Certainly". "She told me that she found it very difficult, because she was numb, she could rarely continue writing for 15 minutes before she felt numb in her head, and then mimicked the scene when she dropped her head on the table as if she was falling asleep."

Royal historian and author Hugh Wicker says the queen discovered the love of taking notes during her adolescence after watching her father write it. "Once asked one of the visiting bishops: Do you write them yourself? "I can not really ask anyone else to write it," she replied.

An insider revealed that she used drying papers and placed them under the papers on which she was writing.